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A50088 The counsell and admonition of Henry Massingberd, Esq., to his children Massingberd, Henry. 1656 (1656) Wing M1044; ESTC R7677 141,779 251

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profession I esteem it a calling most subject to temptations and therefore spiritually dangerous if not with most serious care performed Luk. 3.14 Wherein I doe not condemn or wholly disallow in any case the taking up of Arms but I counsell and advise that it be not undertaken without most pious care and circumspection which may by the mercy of the God of hosts obtain his blessed guidance and direction and preservation from those manifold dangerous allurements and temptations incident to that imployment which strongly presse to the distraction of the soul with which the body must participate Time is a root that certainly brings forth many branches many casualties and changes it doth produce to all mortality and nothing befits a man better to entertain such passages then such a calling and imployment as when evill presents it self to us we may have ready at hand honest and just actions to assist pious and holy meditations from which we by the gracious mercy of God shall receive much comfort and never be ashamed whereas idlenesse and want of good and honest action is a root for any evill Psal 103.26 All of them shall wax old as doth a garment and as a vesture shalt thou change them and they shall be changed Hos 4.7 And they sinned against me therefore will I change their glory into shame Isa 65.21 They shall build houses and inhabit them and they shall plant vineyards and cat the fruit thereof And 66. v. 2. For all those things hath my hand made and all those things have been saith the Lord but to this man will I look even to him that is pure and of a contrite spirit and that trembleth at my word 2 Cor. 7.1 Let us cleanse our selves from all filthinesse of the flesh Gal. 5.16 Walk in the spirit and ye shall not fulfill the lusts of the flesh Ver. 19. Now the works of the flesh are manifest which are those adultery fornication uncleannesse lasciviousnesse c. Prov. 19.14 Houses and riches are inheritances of the fathers but a prudent wife is from the Lord. Ver. 2. The contentions of a wife is a continuall dropping 1 Cor. 7.8 I say therefore to the unmarried and widdowes it is good for them if they abide as I. Ver. 9. But if they cannot contain let them marry for it is better to marry then to burn Matth. 19.12 And there be Eunuches which make themselves Eunuches for the kingdome of heavens sake Psal 106.39 Thus they were defiled with their own works Prov. 11.14 Where no counsell is the people fall but in the multitude of counsellors there is safety And 15.22 Without counsell purposes are disappointed but in the multitude of counsellors they are established Psal 1.1 Blessed is the man that walketh not in the counsell of the ungodly nor standeth in the way of sinners nor sitteth in the seat of the scornfull And 73.24 Thou shalt guid me with thy counsell and afterwards receive me into glory Jer. 40.7 Is counsell perished from the prudent is their wisdome vanished Psal 106.13 They soon forgat his works they waited not for his counsell Ver. 14. But lusted excredingly in the wildernesse and tempted God in the desart Ver. 15. And he gave them their request but sent leannesse into their souls Prov. 8.11 Wisdome is better then rubies and all the things that may be desired are not to be compared to her And v. 14. Counsell is mine and sound wisdome I am understanding and have strength Ver. 19. My fruite is better then Gold yea then fine Gold and my revenue then choice Silver Ver. 20. I leade in the way of righteousness in the middest of the paths of judgement Prov. 7.1 c. My Sonne keepe my commandements and hide my words with thee keepe my commmandements and live and my law as the apple of thy eye binde them upon thy fingers write them upon the tables of thy heart say unto wisedome thou art my Sister and call understanding thy Kinswoman that they may keepe thee from the strange woman from the stranger which flattereth with her words Ver. ● I descried among the youth a young man voide of understanding Ver. 10. And behold there met him a woman with the attire of an Harlot and subtile of heart she is loud and stubborne h●r feet abide not in her house for she caught him and kissed him and with an impudent face said unto him I have peace offering with me this day have I paid my vowes therefore come I forth to meet thee dilligently to seek thy face and have found it Ver. 18. Come let us take our fill of love Ver. 21. With much faire speech she caused him to yeeld with the flattering of her lippes she forced him Ver. 22. He goes after her straight way as an Ox goeth to the slaughter or as a foole to the correction of the stockes Ver. 23. Till a dart strike through his liver as a bird hasteth to the snare and knoweth not that it is for his life Prov. 6.23 The commandement is a lampe and the law is light and reproofes of instruction are the way of life Ver. 24. To keepe thee from the evill woman from the flattery of the tongue of the strange woman Ver. 25. Lust not after her beauty in thy heart neither let her take thee with her eye-lids Ver. 27. Can a man take fire in his bosome and his cloathes not be burnt Gal. 5.6 This I say walk in the spirit and ye shall not fulfill the lusts of the flesh Jam. 1.4 Every man is tempted when he is drawn away of his own lusts and entised Ver. 15. When lust is conceived it bringeth forth sinne and sinne when it is finished bringeth forth death 1 Joh. 2.16 17. For all that is in the world the lust of the flesh the lust of the eyes and the pride of life is not of the Father but of the world and the world passeth away and the lusts thereof but he that doth the will of God abideth for ever THe next Age still goeth on in Manhood although in it if we observe we shall finde of necessity many extraordinary changes and alterations therefore now we are entred into this promised Land of our pilgrimage and have in some measure destroyed the wicked it is convenient in this place to seek out a fitting habitation that so we may plant a Vineyard and drink the wine thereof with thankfullnesse here is the blessed gift of Chastity much required about this time and before this too oft and too soon fond youth is apt to think it is not good to be alone there is much promised relicity in a married life but how narrow is the way that leads to this most difficult happinesse how many thousand wayes are there that lead to misery in it If thou meanest to take upon thee a married life seek earnestly by prayer and true reason for heavenly guidance in it that which can be but once done how great need is there that it be well done
when he is old he will not depart from it Pro 22.6 As dayes increase soe must increase our will To doe what 's good and to auoide what 's ill Death is most certaine but the instant when Is most vncertaine to all mortall men Soe soone as one sand dropps the next doth follow Life's here to day and death takes place to morrow Psal 22.26 The meek shall eat and be satisfied And 25.9 The meek will he guide in judgment and the meek will he teach his way 1 Sam. 2.3 Talk no more so exceeding proudly let no arrogancy come out of thy mouth for the Lord is a God of knowledge and by him actions are weighed Prov. 3.13 Happy is he that findeth wisdome and that getteth understanding And Ver. 17. Her wayes are wayes of pleasantnesse and all her pathes peace Psal 50.14 Offer unto God thanksgiving and pay thy vowes unto the most high Deut. 6.2 That thou mightest fear the Lord thy God to keep all his statutes and his Commandemonts which I command thee thou and thy sonne and thy sonnes sonne all the dayes of thy life and that thy dayes may be prolonged Psal 34.11 Come ye children hearken to me I will teach you the fear of the Lord. Psal 111.10 The fear of the Lord is the begining of wisdom a good understanding have all they that doe thereafter and obey his Commandements Psal 119.6 Then shall I not be ashamed when I have respect unto all thy Commandements Joh. 5.39 Search the Scriptures diligently Psal 119.24 Thy testimonies are my delight and my councellors And 37.4 Delight thy self also in the Lord and he shall give thee the desire of thy heart Rom. 12.10 Be kindly affectioned one towards another with brotherly love Eccl. 1.4 One generation passeth and another cometh And 12.1 Remember now thy Creatour in the dayes of thy youth while the evill dayes come not nor the yeares draw nigh when thou shalt say I have no pleasure in them Jude v. 7. As Sodome and Gomorrah are set for our examples suffering the vengeance of eternall fire 1 Thes 5.22 Abstain from all appearance of evill Eccl. 9.3 There is an evill among all things that are done under the Sunne that there is one event to all yea also the hearts of the sonnes of men are full of evill and madnesse while they live and after that they goe down to the dead Eph. 6.11 13. Put on the whole armour of God that ye may be able to stand against the wiles of the devill that ye may stand in the evill day Prov. 8.17 I love them that love me and those that seek me early shall finde me Psal 63.1 O God thou art my God early will I seek thee Gen. 8.21 The imagination of mans heart is evill from his youth Eph. 2.3 And were by nature the children of wrath Jude v. 20. But what they know naturally as bruit beasts in those things they corrupt themselves 2 Pet. 3.1 2. In both which I stir up your willing mindes by way of remembrance that ye may be mindfull of the words which were spoken before by the holy Prophets and of the Commandements of us the Apostles of the Lord our Saviour Rom. 2.21 Thou therefore that teachest another teachest not thou thy self thou that preachest a man should not steal doest thou steal Matth. 7.15 Beware of false prophets or teachers which come to you in sheeps cloathing but inwardly are ravening wolves THe second Age is termed Childhood a right wandring in the wildernesse in which meeknesse is required The first we discovered and commenced our time now it is requisite to speak something of Action which is the life of a man in his time of this I would by the help of God admonish in order according to the severall steps and degrees of capacity Such action as concerns this second Age is the beginning truly to rellish and entertain wholesome doctrine and admonition such as tend to our temporall but especially to our eternall welfare Now that we are entred into this wholesome Land and possed the danger of a seven-years journey in the troublesome pilgrimage of this mortality it is good that we apply our mindes how we may become serviceable to our mercifull Creator and imploy our appointed time in his Vineyard like faithfull servitors that when he comes or calls we may be ready to passe our account with joy and comfort and not with grief In this Age we are to proceed in those little foot-steps of learning which probably if not much neglected hath been laid out to us in the former Age. Foundations ought to be of the most lasting materials because if they fail the whole building is in danger and they are most hard and unusuall to be removed therefore let thy first learning be the best and that is thy duty to thy Maker which comprehendeth the generall performance of all duty Learn divine precepts especially the old and new Testament that may make thee wise to salvation and that will by Gods mercy bring on a delight in prayer in reading and hearing the Word of the Almighty Instruct a childe while he is young and he will remember it afterwards Never teach a childe that which is evill which he must either leave or be untaught ingraft brotherly love one in another ever rejoycing in one anothers welfare but especially in the good of your eternity Now thou must begin to take some notice of passages and accidents that doe may or have befallen thee or some near thee especially of the death and mortality of thy friend or acquaintance for often to think of death is a great means to be well prepared for it and taking notice of passages and casualty in others fits us for changes and alterations that must befall our selves About this time it is that corrupted youth begins to make excuse for faults but doe thou fly the faults and it is sufficient Strive to know good from evill then follow the good and be sure to avoid all appearances of evill he hardly recovers health that knowes not he is sick if we begin not our cure betime when shall we cast off those many plagues and sicknesses that begirt us A Christian must be an expert Spirituall Souldier and therefore must learn betime to put on his whole armour of salvation we must begin to reform and correct our mindes before they be confirmed in wickednesse and corruption corrupted nature proffers no man a good minde before an evill therefore is the minde to be enforced so shall the medicine prove sweet while it cureth Of other remedies there are certain pleasures after health Divinity is both wholesome and pleasing it is very necessary that Tutors and teachers of Children and all that company with them be religiously disposed gentle and peaceable example in this age especially prevailes much beyond precept that which is tender layeth hold on that which is near unto it growes with it and is fashioned to it Nurces and Masters are often imitated
day and night Psal 119.15 I will meditate in thy precepts and have respect unto thy Lawes And 143.5 I meditate on all thy works and remember the dayes of old And 55.14 We took sweet counsell together and walked unto the house of God in company Matth. 7.5 Pull out the beam out of thy own eye then shalt thou see clearly to pull out the moat out of thy brothers eye Prov. 11.28 He that trusteth in riches shall fall but the righteous shall flourish as a branch 1 Tim. 6.7 Charge them that are rich in this world that they be not high mended nor trust in uncertain riches but in the living God who giveth us richly all things to enjoy Psal 7.15 He made a pit and digged it and is fallen into the pit which he made Prov. 26.27 Who so diggeth a pit shall fall therein Psal 9.15 The heathen are sink down in the pit that they made in the net which they hid is their own foot taken And 10.2 Let them be taken in the devices which they have imagined Prov. 11.6 The righteousnesse of the upright shall deliver them but transgressors shall be taken in their own naughtinesse Eccl. 3.1 There is a time to every purpose under heaven 1 Cor. 7.20 Let every man abide in the same calling wherein he was called Ezra 7.10 For Ezra had prepared his heart to seek the Law of the Lord and to doe it and to teach in Israel statutes and judgments Psal 119.115 Depart from me ye evill doers for I will keep the Commandement of my God And 9● O how I love thy Law it is my meditation all the day And 99. I have more understanding then all my teachers for thy testimonies are my meditation Eccl. 10.1 Through idlenes the house droppeth thorow THe next Age is vulgarly called Man-hood and that may be somewhat like destroying of the wicked after our dangerous passage into Canaan for the heart of man is desperately wicked from his youth Now search for wisdome now is the corrupted earth fit for fruit here is required prudence and true humility if we sleep in pride and self-opinion the destroyer sowes his tares the heart of man is like a fruitfull ground that must be laboured weeded and sown with good seed else briars and thorns will soon spring up and cover it To a right ordering of our selves in this condition what great occasion have we of right ruled reason and true celestiall wisdome which makes so wise to salvation that it raiseth a man far above all terrestriall and diabolicall attempts so that they cannot hurt or violate it The minde is the most excellent part of a man prudence and humility is an especiall guide to it by the minde are actions tried as we there rellish so are our attempts how needfull then is the guide of perfect reason it is the hand that guides the minde to promote and allow those things only which are honest good and profitable and abhor and avoid the contrary it is the light of the Lord unto us whereby we may discern good and evill it 's that which names us men and only maks us differ from the beasts Our good is said to be consummate if we have fulfilled that to which we were born which is true reason sufficient not only to foresee but to execute an action Take great heed to avoid all the enemies to this sure guide among the rest avoid anger for what is more foolish then that reason Fly youthfull lusts but follow after righteousnes faith charity peace with the pure in hart Tim 2.2.22 Take heede vnto thy stepps lest Sathans rage Doe snare thee running in thy pilgrimage To rotten bones I must be sent Vnless resurrection doth prevent The constant motion of this running glass Puts mee in minde how lif 's swift steede doth pass should seek assistance from wrath a stable thing from an uncertain a faithfull from a perfidious a whole from a sick in those actions themselves wherein the help of anger seems to be most requisite reason it self is more strong the very designes of reason and wrath are different for reason will have that judged which is right but wrath will have that seem right which she judgeth and although the truth be laid before hereyes she loveth and maintaineth errour she will not be reproved and in evill enterprises she esteemeth it more honest to be obstinate then to repent her self cursed wrath that will be angry with truth her self if it oppose her will Is it wisdome onely that makes us differ from beasts and is it our best guide to the well ordering of our lives then let us inquire into the properties of this wisdome that so we may adorn our selves therewith Some will have it that a wise man can receive no wrong as to himself for by his patience and right understanding of the end of all conditions the evill rests upon the author and actor of it Also wise men only know to whom to give and how to bestow the benefits and are very much content with their serious thoughts and meditations and do not permit external things to adde or detract much from them The company and advice of wise men is very profitable for that they are not subject to motion of anger neither can they be moved with disorder or intangle themselves with miseries and in condemning others faults they alwaies begin with their own as for outward riches they use them as servants but fools use them as commanders Some have conceived that evill in it self is only evill to him that offereth it that which offendeth ought to have more force then that which is offended but vice hath not more force then vertue whereupon it followeth that wise men cannot be offended they are patient and apply all things to the best remedy brideling their passions and judging all evill otherwaies then the passionate and converting all to good Wisdome seeks no revenge for that properly belongs to God Vengeance is mine and I will repay saith the Lord from whose forbearance and long-suffering we may learn patience wherefore to avoid strife is a remedy against much trouble and it is a true point of wisdome to be prepared against all appearances of evill with constancy to that end betake thy self to some honest employment for thou shalt finde it most necessary and beneficiall unto thee to spend thy time in some honest calling which must by no means hinder thy constant devotion and meditation All callings may be abused and a man may be wicked and violate his soul or he may be upright in any of them but of all I only advise from a soul hers life wherein me thinks the soul is made subject to the body which is the ready way of ruine to them both for that a man doth binde himself to kill his neighbour at every order and command of another without examination or knowledge of the cause or matter wherefore as for other irreligious exorbitancies almost wholly overspreading that
that thou wilt turn me from all my evill waies and give me true repentance from the bottome of my heart so I shall be turned unto thee in true love for thou art the Lord my God and thy mercy endures for ever Selah Let the words of my mouth and the meditations of my heart Psal 19.14 be now and ever acceptable in thy sight O Lord my strength and my redeemer Incline not my heart to evill that I should commit wicked works with men that work iniquity Set a watch O Lord before my mouth and keep the door of my lips so shall my mouth speak thy praises for ever Amen O my sweet eternity and my eternall Saviour in thy love to poor sinners in Jesus and for his sake I only beg of thee trusting that in him thou wilt not deny me notwithstanding all my sinnes for thou art good and thy mercy endures for ever And first my most humble petition unto thy most sacred Majesty is that thou wouldest of free and perfect mercy pardon all my breach of Covenants with thee or men as thy mercy endures for ever Secondly To pardon accordingly my vowing and not paying for thou art good as thy mercy endures for ever Thirdly to pardon of thy like goodnesse all my hypocrisie towards thee and man as thou art good and as thy mercy endures for ever Fourthly To pardon all my blasphemies against thy Majesty any manner of way as thou my God art only good and as thy mercy endures for ever Fifthly To pardon all my Lies wherewith I have given thee cause of Anger against me as thou art good and as thy mercy endures for ever Sixthly To pardon all my relations speaking absolutely yet beyond my certain knowledge at that time when I spoke them as thou my good Lord art onely and perfectly good and thy mercy endures for ever Seventhly To pardon all my Oathes and taking of thy Name in vain as thou art good and thy mercy endures for ever Eighthly To pardon all my vain and idle speakings as thou art good and as thy mercy endures for ever O my mercifull and loving Father I humbly pray thee for thy Sonne my Saviours sake and in his Name be graciously pleased to pardon and forgive all the sinnes of all my senses I humbly acknowledge I have been dull to listen to thy commands but most ready and open to receive vanity to the corrupting and as much as in me lieth the destruction of my body and soul For give I humbly beg also the sins of my seeing smelling tasting goings and of all the members and faculties of my body and soul for they have all rebelled against thy gracious mercy to their due deservings of eternall death O Lord who knowes the errour of his heart and of his waies cleanse my soul O Lord from my secret sinnes and deliver me I humbly beseech thee from my presumptuous sinnes least they get the dominion over me O cleanse thou me and so I shall be cleansed I doubt not but thou wilt in thy infinite love to the works of thy own hands and in thy free pardoning of sinne for Jesus Christ his sake give me eternall life with thy servants and wilt not impute the guilt of sinne unto me for thou art the Lord my God whose mercy endures for ever above all thy works Selah In thee therefore I will rejoice A Confession and humble suit for Pardon in Jesus Christ O My mercifull Lord God I humbly pray thee for Christ thy Sonne my only Lord and Saviours sake to pardon and put clear out of thy remembrance that originall sinne and damnation due to me from the loynes and rebellions of my first parents O forgive thou the sinnes of my father and let the sinnes of my mother be done away I doubt not oh my Father of mercy but thou hast of thy own free goodnesse already done it for I know thou art only perfectly good and thy mercy endures for ever Selah O Father I know thou wilt not visit the originall sinne of my fathers upon me Exek 18.20 for that thou hast said The sonne shall not bear the iniquity of the father neither shall the father bear the iniquity of the sonne but the righteousnesse of the righteous shall be upon him and the wickednesse of the wicked shall be upon himself O Lord I know as a father hath compassion on his children so thou hast compassion on them that fear thee O my God I acknowledge that I was born in iniquity and in sinne hath my mother conceived me Psal 51.5 Exod. 34.6 7. but thou art the Lord my God strong and mercifull and gracious slow to anger and abundant in goodnesse and truth reserving mercy for thousands forgiving iniquities Dan. 9.9 transgressions and sinnes Compassion and forgivenesse is in the Lord our God albeit we have rebelled against him O my Father Eccl. 11.10 Remember not the sinns of my childhood for childhood and youth are vanity When I was a childe I spake as a childe I understood as a childe I thought as a childe but mercy is with thee that thou maist be feared Psal 24.48 Look thou upon my affliction and my travell and forgive all my sinnes It is the joy of my soul O God 86.5 that thou art good and mercifull and of great kindnesse unto all them that call upon thee O my good Lord I beseech thee for thy goodnesse sake remember not the sinnes and vanities of my youth for only thy free mercy in Jesus my Saviour is sufficient to release me from the torments of their deservings Thou my good God in thy saving compassion and sparing us miserable men from our deservings saist Gen. 8.21 The imagination of mans heart is evill even from his youth but thy mercy endures for ever O make me not to possesse the iniquities of my youth Psal 25.7 Remember not the sinnes of my youth nor my rebellions but according to thy loving kindnesse remember thou me even for thy goodnesse sake O Lord for thou art my hope O Lord even my trust from my youth O God thou hast taught me from my youth even untill now therefore will I tell of thy wondrous works I desire most humbly to live if it were thy blessed will from this moment eternally in thy perfect service O my God I must acknowledge and confesse that my heart my will my waies my words and actions have been evill from my youth the leprosie of my sinne is only cureable by the blood of my Saviour that infinite pledge of thy blessed mercy therefore O my good God give me a lively faith to apply it to all my wounds as thou my God art only good and from thee only is the will and the deed of true faith and repentance Amen O my Father Remember not the sinnes of my man hood and riper years I acknowledge O my God when I call to minde my breach of promises and Covenants both with thee
Spirit Q. What then are the best works of a man in this life A. Works of Charity Q. What is Charity A. To help them that need out of a true principle of obedience and love to almighty God Q. Doth Charity extend to all men A. Yea but especially to the houshold of faith Q. What shall be the justifying sentence of the Saints at the resurrection A. Charity See Matth. 25. For I was an hungred and ye gave me meat thirsty and ye gave me drink a stranger and ye took me in naked and ye cloathed me sick and ye visited me in prison and ye came unto me Q. What shall be the condemning sentence of the wicked A. Their want of Charity I was hungry and ye gave me no meate thirsty and ye gave me no drink a stranger and ye took me not in naked and ye cloathed me not sick and in prison and ye visited me not Q. How is the love of the Saints each to other in this life A. As is their hope to live together in their eternity Q. What is their comfort for eternity A. That they shall be converted into the perfect will and service of their Creator for ever Q. What is Prayer A. It is the pouring out the soul to almighty God requesting things lawfull with full submission to his holy will and pleasure Q. What is the best form of Prayer A. That which our Saviour himself hath taught us Q. What is that Rehearse it A. Our Father which art in Heaven Hallowed be thy Name c. Q. Is no other form of Prayer lawfull to be used A. Yes surely as also Prayers on the sudden and upon all occasions so as they be sincere and hearty Q. Are Prayers to be said onely at the Church A. No surely we may pray in any place or condition nay we must pray continually which we doe while we heartily desire and therein do our duty Q. What is truly a Church A. It is the communion of Saints on earth professing and practising the service of the Almighty Q. Which is the most pure and perfect Church on earth A. We beleeve the Christian Church professed under the Reformation of England Q. How many Sacraments hath Christ ordained in the Church A. Two Baptisme and the Lords Supper Q. What is Baptisme A. It is our first admittance into the Church the Water signifying our washing from sinne in the blood of Christ Q. What is the Lords Supper A. A Thankfull remembrance of his satisfying sufferings for our sinnes Q. How ought we to receive it A. Humbly thankfully preparedly Q. How often is it necessary to be received by us A. Four times ordinarily in the year besides upon extraordinary occasions Q. What if we think that we cannot prepare our selves so as that we may receive it faithfully and thankfully and as we ought A. We must by the help of godly Ministers and other pious persons instruct our selves and also by hearing reading fasting prayer and meditation and by all other helpfull wayes prepare and fit our selves for the worthy receiving of this token of our Saviours love and that at our perill Q. May it not then be wholly omitted A. No we ought hereby so to remember our blessed Saviour in our time as we would be remembred by him in our eternity Q. But is there such a necessity in receiving of it as if we doe it not we doe neglect and omit a most necessary duty to salvation whatsoever the occasion or reason be A. No Our blessed God never bindes his servants to impossibilities if lawfull occasions call and take us from necessary opportunity of receiving it so it be without all neglect or contempt on our part it must then be onely in our hearts and wills thankfully acknowledged by us which in his good mercy will be accepted of us for the deed Q. How ought we to carry our selves towards our Children A. With due admonition instruction and imployments Q. How to Servants A. With constant labour and instruction Q. How to the estate A. Not prodigally thereby making our selves uncapable of doing good with it nor too much sparingly to hoard it up from the good end it was created Q. May we give all to Children and Kindred without any respect to others A. No by no means for we are onely stewards to it and must give an account of it to almighty God who lends it us whose will it is that we take for our selves and families such an under proportion thereof that we may be sure to have sufficient relief and charity for the poor distressed Saints whensoever we meet with them that our estates may in some sort at least be helpfull to their necessities but the laying all upon the present and future provision for our selves and Children thereby wholly neglecting Charity is most abhominable Q. What is life A. It is that which preserveth and prepareth the body to be a fit and apt organ for the operations of the soul and chiefly said to abide in the blood Q. What is death A. It is the conclusion and end of all our dayes the master-piece of all our work as we are prepared to entertain it so we are prepared to receive and enter into eternity Q. Is there any change of that condition in which death sends us to our eternity A. No but as the tree falleth so it lies Q. What then is the one thing necessary for the whole course of a mans life A. To watch So saith our Saviour to all men Watch. A Discourse betwixt Adam and Eve Eve My dearest heart fain would I know How all our children down below Observe and keep our Lawes For oft me thinks I hear a cry As if our childrens cruelty Each tore like Lyons jawes Adam Yes truest Love I doe believe Those precepts we to them did give When we were once anseen They soon cast off that natures love Which we so strict to them did give As if it had not been Eve Dear Sir what should this noise afford Doth Cain or his wretched sword Command all humane race Doth he and all his cursed line Poor Abels off spring undermine And so the worst take place Adam Yes truly dear I doe perceive Our peacefull precepts we them gave They wholly leave undone And that which we knew to be worst Which kill'd just Abel O accurst Is chief under the Sun Thou knowest we said thou shalt not kill Nor to thy neighbour doe no ill In body goods or name Yet doth the glittering tyrant sword Destroy all peace and in a word Turnes honour into shame For whereas peace was Abel's crown And warlike Cain was cast down With sentence just ejected Now he that most of all doth ill He who the most doth slay and kill Is most of all respected The true obedience to our God Our duty to obey his word Which in our hearts doth sound They doe divide into such parts By Sophistry and cunning arts That truth is hardly found The government of
natures say That youth the aged should obey And doe them reverence But now fond youth condemns the wise And fools do wisdomes Laws despise By force and negligence The strongest hand doth call it right To cut down all with force might Their rage and will subdueth And if they call the evill good The truth must so be understood Or else their rage reneweth Eve What Husband then it seems the world Is topsie turvey tost and hurld And worst hath best subdued Adam Yes Wife it is decaid and old Truth and devotion 's very cold And soon will be renued Eve Renued or made new my Deare How shall I understand thee here Shall thee and I' gaine meete Shall we in ancient Paradice And in our blessed innocence Each other kindely greete Shall all the sinnes of us and ours Which truth and justice thus devours Be pardoned and forgiven Adam In part but how to tell none can It 's not the act of mortall man But the free gift of Heaven A Prayer O Eternall ever-living and all-sufficient Lord God who art the God of the spirits of all flesh to whom the grave is open from whom there is no covering for destruction I am thy poor wretched and unworthy servant and by reason of my sinne lesse then the least of all thy mercies unworthy so much as to think upon thee or to take thy blessed Name within my corrupted lips much more unworthy am I to have liberty to call upon thy sacred Majesty and to ask those things that I stand in need of with this gracious assurance that thou wilt give me those things that are best for me though I ask them not of thee and though I ask them so unworthily that thou maist justly refuse to give me them because I ask them of thee so unworthily so that I may with humble boldnesse pray Lord give me what is onely best for me though I ask it not and give me not what is evill for me though I ask it but thou art from everlasting to everlasting holy and just and good and thy mercies are above all thy works wherefore I come unto thee not in my own merits but in the merits of thy onely Sonne my onely Saviour Jesus Christ the righteous in whom I believe Lord help my unbelief humbly desiring thy sacred Majesty for his sake and for thy own goodnesse sake towards the works of thine own hands to pardon and passe by all my sinnes actuall and originall to blot them out of thy book of remembrance and to set them so behinde thy back that thou maist never call me to account for them either in this world to my shame or in the world to come to my utter condemnation Give me grace and strength to return unto thee O my God as the prodigall sonne to his father acknowledging my self unworthy to be called thy sonne or servant and give me I humbly pray wisdome which is about thy throne for all wisdome is from thy gracious gift that so I may rightly understand earthly things from heavenly things time from eternity and graciously give me the will and deed to lay up my treasure in Heaven and not on earth And I most humbly crave of thy sacred goodnesse the unresistible power of thy holy Spirit that thereby I may be built up and made perfect to every good work to the true and perfect serving of thee my good God and to the working righteousnesse as thy elected Saints by the powerfull and unresistible guidance of the holy Spirit doe and ought to doe both for and in their time and their eternity And O my good God because many are the controversies and disputes concerning thee thy word thy truth amongst poor mortality to the great destruction fear and trouble of thy poor willing and desiring servants Let thy sacred Spirit O my God speak the truth of thy will and of my duty to my conscience and then give me grace and strength to follow my conscience in the sacred way of thy holy Spirit that so I may keep a good conscience towards thee my God and towards men And I humbly pray that thy gracious Spirit may also reveale unto my soule what righteousnesse and what unrighteousnesse is what is truth and what is error what is the perfect duty of thy servant in all the passage of his pilgrimage under the Sunne and what is not the duty of thy servant to doe that so I may not onely perform unto thy sacred Majesty my present duty in thy blessed service but that I may doe it knowingly willingly and wittingly and that I may not only avoid all the appearances of evill but that I may doe it also knowingly willingly and wittingly as becomes the most faithfull and perfect servant of my Creator O give unto thy servant a discerning spirit inable him perfectly O my God to know good from evill and then give him grace and strength to doe the good and avoid the evill as becomes thy most blessed servants And give unto me thy servant O my good God a true principle of due obedient love in all my devotions and undertakings whatsoever towards thee my good God And for thy mercies sake teach me thy statutes and hide not thy precepts from me lead me in the way that I should goe and hold me in the living path of thy most joyfull servants Search my heart O God and try my wayes for there are wayes of iniquity in me and lead me in the way everlasting Let me have here in this life O my good God that and that only which may most perfect and fit me in soule and body for thy eternall and most sacred service Let the daily presidents of mortality O my good God move me to true repentance give me to know O my eternall Creator that I am no better then my parents but as they are returned with their bodies to the grave and their souls to thee the God that gave them so it must be with me Give me to know O Eternity that here is no abiding place here is no continuing dwelling give me grace and strength our good God to seek and finde one to come eternall in the Heavens Give thy servant O my gracious God true love to thee my God for thy own sake to my neighbour for thy Commandement sake and all for obedience sake unto thy blessed Majesty Give me to see O thou my only Good the blessed marks of thy sweet corrections both upon my body and soule in this life those glorious impressions by which thou sealest to thy self thy beloved children in whom thy soul delighteth O my most gracious God although I be most unworthy to be by thy good grace accounted such a childe such delight so beloved yet for thy own goodnesse sake let thy blessed seale of thy fatherly impression be upon me even what thou wilt for I assuredly know thou wilt with my most needfull saving Crosse give thy servant most needfull and saving strength to bear it